These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Clinical features and outcomes of Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG)-induced diseases following neonatal BCG Tokyo-172 strain immunization. Author: Rermruay R, Rungmaitree S, Chatpornvorarux S, Brukesawan C, Wittawatmongkol O, Lapphra K, Phongsamart W, Kongstan N, Khumcha B, Chokephaibulkit K. Journal: Vaccine; 2018 Jun 27; 36(28):4046-4053. PubMed ID: 29859799. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccination at birth may cause mild and benign local adverse effects (AE). More serious AE are rarely reported. OBJECTIVE: To describe clinical features and outcomes of BCG (Tokyo-172 strain)-induce diseases (BCG-ID) that required medical attention at a tertiary care center in Bangkok, Thailand. METHOD: We retrospectively reviewed medical records from January 2007 to December 2016 that were selected by ICD-10 codes. The inclusion criteria were the patients under 3 years of age who developed lymphadenitis, osteitis, or disseminated infections of which BCG was a possible pathogen. Cases were classified into suspected (clinically compatible without laboratory confirmation), probable (suspected cases with M. tuberculosis complex identified), and confirmed BCG-ID (probable cases with molecular confirmation of M. bovis BCG strain). RESULTS: 95 children were identified; 57 (60.0%) were male, and the median age at presenting symptom was 3.5 (range: 0.6-28.7) months. Of these, 25 (26.3%) were suspected, 49 (51.6%) were probable, and 21 (22.1%) were confirmed BCG-ID. Overall, 87 (92%) children had regional lymphadenitis corresponding to the BCG site, 5 (5%) had osteitis, and 3 (3%) had disseminated BCG. Of those with lymphadenitis, average size was 2.2 (range 0.7-5) cm. in diameter and 53% (46/87) had pulmonary involvement. Five children with immunodeficiency; three had disseminated BCG and two had lymphadenitis. Eight (9.2%) patients with lymphadenitis underwent needle aspiration; 57 (65.5%) had surgical excision. All children with BCG osteitis underwent surgical intervention in combination with anti-tuberculosis treatment. One patient with osteitis experienced long-term leg length discrepancy. CONCLUSION: Regional lymphadenitis was the most common feature of BCG-ID requiring medical attention. That none of the BCG osteitis were immunocompromised hosts suggested the potential virulence of BCG in neonates. A systematic national surveillance and reporting system is needed to develop accurate estimates of population incidence and support development of effective vaccine policy.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]